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This is the story of the radical intervention carried out by the
Thatcher administration in response to 1986-89 Monopolies and
Mergers Commission inquiry into brewing. It describes the creation
of big brewers, the official investigations into what many saw as
an uncompetitive structure and the damaging consequences for
consumers and licensees.
The storm has become a universal trope in the literature of crisis,
revelation and transformation. It can function as a trope of place,
of apocalypse and epiphany, of cultural mythos and story, and of
people and spirituality. This book explores the connections between
people, place and environment through the image of cyclones within
fiction and poetry from the Australian state of Queensland, the
northern coast of which is characterized by these devastating
storms. Analyzing a range of works including Alexis Wright's
Carpentaria, Patrick White's The Eye of the Storm, and Vance
Palmer's Cyclone it explains the cyclone in the Queensland literary
imagination as an example of a cultural response to weather in a
unique regional place. It also situates the cyclones that appear in
Queensland literature within the broader global context of literary
cyclones.
Pioneer aviatrix Jessie ""Chubbie"" Miller made a significant
contribution to aviation history. The first woman to fly from
England to Australia (as co-pilot with her close friend Captain
Bill Lancaster), she was the first to fly more than 8000 miles, to
cross the equator in the air and to traverse the Australian
continent north to south. Moving to America, Miller was a popular
member of a group of female aviators that included Amelia Earhart,
Bobby Trout, Pancho Barnes and Louise Thaden. As a competitor in
international air races and a charter member of the first
organization for women flyers, the Ninety-Nines, she quickly became
famous. Her career was interrupted by her involvement in
Lancaster's sensational Miami trial for the murder of her lover,
Haden Clarke, and by Lancaster's disappearance a few years later
while flying across the Sahara desert.
From the very beginning of Clark Gable's screen career, the life of
the glamorous film star came under the scrutiny of the camera.
While audiences are familiar with the public Gable as seen through
the studio lens, the private Gable as seen in photos taken by
members of the public, friends, and family is much less known. This
collection of candid photographs, many of them published here for
the first time, has been compiled by biographer Chrystopher J.
Spicer from his archives and from sources around the world. As with
Spicer's acclaimed centenary biography Clark Gable (McFarland,
2002), this volume provides rare insight into the life of the man
behind the star.
Ecologists have always believed, at least to a certain extent, that
physiological mechanisms serve to underpin ecological patterns.
However, their importance has traditionally been at best
underestimated and at worst ignored, with physiological variation
being dismissed as either an irrelevance or as random noise/error.
Spicer and Gaston make a convincing argument that the precise
physiology does matter
In contrast to previous works which have attempted to integrate
ecology and physiology, Physiological Diversity adopts a completely
different and more controversial approach in tackling the
physiology first before moving on to consider the implications for
ecology. This is timely given the recent and considerable interest
in the mechanisms underlying ecological patterns. Indeed, many of
these mechanisms are physiological.
This textbook provides a contemporary summary of physiological
diversity as it occurs at different hierarchical levels
(individual, population, species etc.), and the implications of
such diversity for ecology and, by implication, evolution. It
reviews what is known of physiological diversity and in doing so
exposes the reader to all the key works in the field. It also
portrays many of these studies in a completely new light, thereby
serving as an agenda for, and impetus to, the future study of
physiological variation.
"Physiological Diversity" will be of relevance to senior
undergraduates, postgraduates and professional researchers in the
fields of ecology, ecological physiology, ecotoxicology,
environmental biology and conservation. The book spans both
terrestrial and marine systems.
This is the story of the radical intervention carried out by the
Thatcher administration in response to 1986-89 Monopolies and
Mergers Commission inquiry into brewing. It describes the creation
of big brewers, the official investigations into what many saw as
an uncompetitive structure and the damaging consequences for
consumers and licensees.
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